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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 July 2016
In 1781-84 Carl Friedrich Meerwein (1737-1810), a South German builder and architect to his namesake, Karl Friedrich, Prince of Baden, worked on ideas for a practical ornithopter. Living in comparative obscurity in Emmendingen, a small town near Freiburg, he began in August 1781 by building a simple pair of ellipsoidal wings. He might have taken the matter no further had his interest not been caught by reports of Pierre Blanchard's abortive flying attempts in Paris, published in a Basel journal in July 1782. During the next two years, when everyone in Europe was talking about the French balloonists, Meerwein decided to set out his ideas for a heavier-than-air machine. Published in Basel in the summer of 1784, his book was widely read. A modified French version was published in the same year and reissued in 1785, and in 1812 a Portuguese translation appeared.